Rethinking the BBC Public Media in the 21st Century Edited by Niki Seth-Smith, Jamie Mackay and Dan Hind Collection copyright openDemocracy Published in 2016 by Commonwealth, 27 Bath Road Margate CT9 1SJ commonwealth-publishing.com The authors have asserted their right under the Copyright, Designs and Patent Act of 1988 to be identified as the authors of this work. The individual pieces are published under a Creative Commons licence that permits non- commercial reproduction. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/uk/ When attributing articles, please include the following: ‘This article was originally published in the independent online magazine www.opendemocracy.net’ Cover design by Kieran McCann Cover image is adapted from a photo by Mike Knell, under a Creative Commons license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/ The editors would like to thank Mike Flood Page for his advice throughout the project and Billy Sawyers and Mary Rider for their painstaking assistance with the preparation of the text. Foreword Niki Seth-Smith and Dan Hind 1. The BBC Belongs To Us Introduction Chapter 1: ‘What would an autonomous BBC look like?’ Justin Schlosberg Consider a name change , Deborah Bull I Chapter 2: Saving the BBC from itself , Anthony Barnett Introduce democracy and an elected Director General, Jeremy Gilbert II Chapter 3: The new British popular , Nicholas Mirzoeff Turn over programming and curation to the people, Stella Duffy III Chapter 4: Ensuring independence, Richard Tait Think beyond the living room, Irenosen Okojie IV Chapter 5: The Beeb and British branding, Michael Gardiner, Claire Westall 2. Getting Back in Touch Introduction Make a school iPlayer, Mark Cousins V Chapter 1: The Corporation needs to care about class, Rhian Jones Allow minority groups to tell a narrative that’s not confined to cliché, Chimene Suleyman VI Chapter 2: Why the BBC has lost touch: here’s how it can reconnect, Sarah O’Connell BBC news needs a women’s editor, Charlotte Gerada VII Chapter 3: We need a new Scottish channel, Iain MacWhirter Bring back industrial relations reporting, Daniel Randall VIII Chapter 4: From Public Service to Public Control, Dan Hind 3. Regaining Trust Introduction Chapter 1: Auntie Beeb and government surveillance, Harry Blain Make programmes no one else will Brian Eno IX Chapter 2: How the BBC betrayed the NHS, Olly Huitson Support rural investigative journalism, George Monbiot X Chapter 3: The General Strike to Corbyn: 90 years of BBC establishment bias, Tom Mills Don’t dumb down, Ian McEwan Chapter 4: BBC and Brexit, Julian Petley Free your staff to voice their opinions, Peter Hitchens XI Chapter 5: Bringing investigations back to the BBC, Meirion Jones 4. How to be public in the market? Introduction Chapter 1: The growing gap between public and private broadcasting in Europe, Des Freedman Remind us why public service really matters, Allyson Pollock XII Chapter 2: The BBC as market shaper and creator , Mazzucato and O’Donovan Bring literature to the public, Philip Pullman XIII Chapter 3 Let’s not shatter the fragile economy of British PSB, Fiona Chesterton Fight for the right to Strictly! Mike Flood Page XIV Chapter 4: The blind protectors of the BBC are hastening its demise, David Elstein Sharing the licence fee could re-invigorate the BBC, Aaron Bastani XV Chapter 5: Do my biscuits pass your public value test?, Lis Howell 5. Open up, the future is coming! Introduction Chapter 1: How is citizen journalism transforming the BBC? Lisette Johnson Be the world’s broadcasting station, Bill Emmott XVI Chapter 2: From the frontlines of the fight against religious illiteracy, Aaqil Ahmed Cory Doctorow: Open up the archives XVII Chapter 3: The answer to ‘Breaking Bad blues’ is more autonomy, Peter Jukes Recruit and train content allies, Mark Lee Hunter XVIII Chapter 4: Shape the digital public sphere or die trying, Becky Hogge Time for public service algorithms, James Bennett XIX Chapter 5: The BBC’s poetry is needed more than ever , Nick Fraser Afterword Niki Seth-Smith and Dan Hind The BBC as market shaper and creator Mariana Mazzucato, Cian O’Donovan An earlier version of this article was first published on the LSE Media Policy Project Blog. 141 At the heart of the government’s White Paper on the future of the BBC is an implicit accusation that the broadcaster is ‘crowding out’ the market through the scale and quality of its services. The White Paper seeks to build a new charter that challenges (and potentially limits) the scope of public service broadcasters, allowing greater room for private sector players. The government's primary strategy in this regard is its 'distinctiveness' agenda which seeks to evaluate content and content creation activities. This agenda represents a substantial and ongoing potential threat to the BBC and other public service broadcasters, such as Channel 4. In this piece we focus on the critique that the BBC is 'crowding out' private broadcasters. Rather than beginning with a market failure framework, which sees public organizations—such as the BBC— as only relevant in their capacity to fix market failures (such as public goods that are not invested in by the private sector), we view the BBC through a market creation and market shaping framework. We argue that the criteria for evaluating and assessing public organizations that stem from such a framework are very different from those that stem from a market failure one. The BBC is accused of ‘stealing’ audience from private broadcasters, diminishing potential income from advertising (or subscription) and, consequently, private investments. If the BBC is to be blamed for ‘crowding out’ private broadcasters, it is necessary to prove that the private broadcasters would engage in the part of the broadcasting landscape that the BBC has dared to occupy. Recent research shows this perspective to be flawed.142 In short, there is a finite pool of advertising pounds available within the UK and were the BBC not to exist, this limited pool would not and could not increase to fill the void.143 Furthermore, this defence does not account for the fact that businesses are often risk-averse and unwilling (or unable) to transform existing landscapes, or indeed create new ones. For example, in 2012, BBC TV invested 56 pence of every pound of revenue in first-run UK content. The equivalent figures were 44 pence for the commercial public service broadcasters (based on total PSB revenues) and a meagre 7 pence for the rest of the commercial sector.144 Yet if the BBC is to robustly defend itself from the charge of crowding out, it needs not only strong counterfactual evidence such as the example above, but also a framework to more accurately assess its contribution to industry and society within the UK and abroad. The ‘crowding out’ argument is a based on a framework which sees public services in general, and the BBC in particular, as a means of last resort. Their role is not to compete (in the production of higher quality goods and services) but rather to limit their activity to addressing market failures. Market failures arise if there are positive externalities such as public goods, or negative externalities such as pollution. But the use of market failure theory here is misplaced as it does not capture the BBC’s leadership role in the UK’s incredibly vibrant culture industry—producing high quality affordable services, with a strong notion of public value that goes beyond a notion of public good. The assumption is that there is an existing market, and if the BBC takes a larger chunk of it, or one not tackling a particular public good problem, there is less left for the private sector, and this leads to criticisms that active public organizations like the BBC not only crowd out but also stifle innovation. The kind of public value that the BBC has produced cannot be captured by the narrow economic definition of the public good, which assumes an existing market which is ‘fixed’ by the public sector due to under-investments by the private sector. Yes, the private sector tends to under-invest in non-commercial areas, but this does not mean that the public sector cannot go transform areas that are normally considered to be commercial (e.g. soap operas and talk shows). Precisely in order to reach a wider audience, and have social impact, a public broadcaster can and should reach out with transformational messages through traditional channels. Other wise the risk is that it remains in a small elite corner of the market, as is often the case in other countries. In other words, public value is a more dynamic concept than public good, focussed on the process by which value is generated in social and collective ways. As Barry Bozeman writes: “Public values are those providing normative consensus about (a) the rights, benefits, and prerogatives to which citizens should (and should not) be entitled; (b) the obligations of citizens to society, the state, and one another; (c) and the principles on which governments and policies should be based.”145 Key here is understanding how, as emphasized in Mazzucato's book The Entrepreneurial State, the public sector not only ‘de-risks’ the private sector by sharing its risk, it often ‘leads the way’o setting the direction of change, and courageously taking on risk that the private sector fears.146 Thus rather than analysing public sector investment via the need to correct ‘market failures’, it is necessary to build a theory of how the public sector shapes and creates markets—as it has done in the history of the IT revolution, but also that of biotechnology, nanotechnology, and in the emerging landscape of green technology.
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